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Using Data for Continuous School Improvement

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Presentation on theme: "Using Data for Continuous School Improvement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Using Data for Continuous School Improvement
McKinney Independent School District Education for the Future Bradley J. Geise

2 BACKGROUND Education for the Future – Non-Profit Initiative
Victoria L. Bernhardt, Exec Director California State University, Chico Our Mission Funded by contracts. 17 Books, Conferences, Institutes, Workshop. Manage long-term implementation contracts. Monthly online meeting series.

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4 AGENDA WHY data analysis/continuous school improvement?
WHAT process/data do we need to engage for school improvement? HOW do we involve all staff in the process of school improvement? …focused on problem solving.

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6 WHY Data Analysis/Continuous
School Improvement?

7 How do you define highly effective leadership
How do you define highly effective leadership? What are the characteristics?

8 PRECONDITIONS FOR SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT
A Shared Vision for School Improvement. Data-Informed Decision Making. Instructional Coherence.

9 LEADERSHIP Focus on compliance and accountability.
Top down decision making. Personality driven. Focus on a real commitment to continuous improvement. Facilitative leadership focused on implementation of a shared vision. Efforts are designed to become systemic/systematic.

10 VISION defines the desired or intended future state of an organization or enterprise in terms of its fundamental objectives relative to key, core areas (curr, inst, assess, environ).

11 Curriculum— What we teach. Instruction— How we teach the curriculum.
VISION Curriculum— What we teach. Instruction— How we teach the curriculum. Assessment— How we assess learning. Environment— How each person treats every other person.

12 MISSION succinctly defines the fundamental purpose of an organization or an enterprise, describing why they exist.

13 Mission Vision Continuous Improvement Cycle

14 Data Analysis for Continuous School Improvement Is About What You Are Evaluating Yourself Against

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23 It describes the work that schools do, linking the essential elements
IMPORTANT NOTES It describes the work that schools do, linking the essential elements It is a process of evidence, engagement, and artifacts

24 LEADING THE CHANGE/IMPROVEMENT
PROCESS Identify the change agents. Empower with data to identify need(s). Collaboratively prescribe change. Support through prof learning, leadership, partnerships. Evaluate to make sure it is making the intended difference. VISION

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26 The Data

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29 DEMOGRAPHICS ARE IMPORTANT DATA
Describe the context of the school and school district. Help us understand all other numbers. Are used for disaggregating other types of data. Describe our system and leadership.

30 Attendance (Absences) Expulsions Suspensions
DEMOGRAPHICS Enrollment Gender Ethnicity / Race Attendance (Absences) Expulsions Suspensions Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

31 DEMOGRAPHICS (Continued)
Language Proficiency Indicators of Poverty Special Needs/Exceptionality IEP (Yes/No) Drop-Out/Graduation Rates Program Enrollment Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

32 School and Teaching Assignment Qualifications
STAFF DEMOGRAPHICS School and Teaching Assignment Qualifications Years of Teaching/At this school Gender, ethnicity Additional Professional Development Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

33 WHAT STUDENT DEMOGRAPHIC DATA ELEMENTS CHANGE WHEN LEADERSHIP CHANGES?
Enrollment Gender Ethnicity/Race Attendance (Absences) Expulsions Suspensions Language Proficiency Indicators of Poverty Special Needs/ Exceptionality IEP (Yes/No) Drop-Out / Graduation Rates Program Enrollment

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35 PERCEPTIONS ARE IMPORTANT DATA
Help us understand what students, staff, and parents are perceiving about the learning environment. We cannot act different from what we value, believe, perceive. Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

36 Student, Staff, Parent, Alumni Questionnaires Observations
PERCEPTIONS INCLUDE Student, Staff, Parent, Alumni Questionnaires Observations Focus Groups Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

37 PERCEPTIONS What do you suppose students say is the #1 “thing” that has to be in place in order for them to learn? Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

38 a strange feeling like we’ve just been going in circles.”
“I’ve got it, too, Omar…. a strange feeling like we’ve just been going in circles.”

39 PERCEPTIONS Given what we have discussed so far, what key measure must be a part of any staff questionnaire? Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

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41 STUDENT LEARNING ARE IMPORTANT DATA
Know what students are learning. Understand what we are teaching. Determine which students need extra help.

42 STUDENT LEARNING DATA INCLUDE
Diagnostic Assessments (Universal Screeners) Classroom Assessments Formative Assessments (Progress Monitoring) Summative Assessments (High Stakes Tests, End of Course)

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44 STUDENT LEARNING ARE IMPORTANT DATA
What happens when learning organizations react solely to the measures used for compliance and accountability?

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46 SCHOOL PROCESSES Schools are perfectly designed to get the results they are getting now. If schools want different results, they must measure and then change their processes to create the results they really want.

47 SCHOOL PROCESSES Processes include… Actions, changes, functions that bring about a desired result Curriculum, instructional strategies, assessment, programs, interventions … The way we work.

48 SCHOOL PROCESSES ARE IMPORTANT DATA
Tell us about the way we work. Tell us how we get the results we are getting. Help us know if we have instructional coherence.

49 The missing link in improving K-12 education
SCHOOL PROCESSES The missing link in improving K-12 education The missing link in meeting NCLB requirements

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53 "We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them."
Albert Einstein

54 CONTRIBUTING CAUSES:. Underlying cause or causes
CONTRIBUTING CAUSES: Underlying cause or causes of positive or negative results.

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56 Not enough students are proficient in Mathematics.
IDENTIFY THE PROBLEM Not enough students are proficient in Mathematics.

57 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE Example Hunches/Hypotheses

58 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE Example Hunches/Hypotheses

59 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE
What questions do you need to answer to know more about the problem, and what data do you need to gather?

60 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE Example Questions/Data Needed

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62 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE
1. Identify a problem/ undesirable result. 2. List 20 reasons this problem exists (from the perspective of your staff).

63 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE
3. Determine what questions you need to answer with data. 4. What data do you need to gather to answer the questions?

64 THE PROBLEM-SOLVING CYCLE Please post on chart paper.

65 PROBLEM SOLVING CYCLE Time savings.
Evidence: Automatically end up at the 4 circles. Focus on the process(es) at the root. Engagement: Makes big problems manageable. Time savings. Key in making the move from personality driven to systemic and systematic.

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67 Digging Deeper Into Process Measurement

68 SCHOOL PROCESSES Schools are perfectly designed to get the results they are getting now. If schools want different results, they must measure and then change their processes to create the results they really want.

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71 “How can anyone be sure that a particular set of new inputs will produce better outputs if we don’t at least study what happens inside?” Paul Black and Dylan Wiliam

72 MONITORING SCHOOL PROGRAMS AND PROCESSES
If you are not monitoring and measuring program implementation, the program probably does not exist.

73 MONITORING AND EVALUATING PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
If you can describe what a program will look like when implemented, you can monitor its implementation, and evaluate its impact.

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75 Everything we do is a PROCESS.

76 FLOWCHARTING SCHOOL PROCESSES
Assess what is really being implemented. Understand how we get our results. Determine the cause of a problem or challenge.

77 FLOWCHARTING SCHOOL PROCESSES
Build common understandings of a whole process. Communicate process related information visually. Provide a way to monitor and update processes.

78 PROCESS FLOWCHARTS Process maps or flow charts are composed of a relatively standardized set of symbols.

79 DIAMONDS ARE FOR DECISIONS
Individual student meets benchmark expectations. Yes No

80 RECTANGLES ARE FOR ACTION
Student does need additional assistance—staff identifies skill deficit and matches intervention.

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82 MARYLIN AVENUE’S SHARED VISION FLOWCHART
Page 63

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85 PROCESS FLOWCHARTS Within your teams, please use the mapping symbols to create a flowchart on chart paper…

86 FLOWCHARTING SCHOOL PROCESSES
Empowering change. Creating a focus on fidelity. Considering best practice and professional learning. Practically applying previous learning. Considering the role of assessment and student learning data. Provides foundation for effective monitoring and measuring. Process allowing reflection on vision (values and beliefs).

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90 “Shared visions emerge from personal visions
“Shared visions emerge from personal visions. This is how they derive their energy and how they foster commitment… If people don’t have their own vision, all they can do is ‘sign up’ for someone else’s. The result is compliance, never commitment.” Peter Senge, The Fifth Discipline

91 BUILDING A MISSION AND VISION
• Identify values and beliefs. • Curr, Instr, Assessment, Environment. Determine purpose. Develop mission. Develop shared vision to accomplish mission. Create action plan.

92 CREATING A VISION AND MISSION
Comprehensive Data Analysis Best Practices Learning

93 Using Data to Inform Mission and Vision A Process of Continuous
Improvement

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95 BUILDING A MISSION AND VISION
• Identify values and beliefs. • Curr, Instr, Assessment, Environment. Determine purpose. Develop mission. Develop shared vision to accomplish mission. Create action plan.

96 Curriculum— What we teach. Instruction— How we teach the curriculum.
VISION Curriculum— What we teach. Instruction— How we teach the curriculum. Assessment— How we assess learning. Environment— How each person treats every other person.

97 Vision is Putting Action to Our Values and Beliefs

98 Value/Belief: Vision: • We must collaborate to provide
…INTO A SHARED VISION Value/Belief: • We must collaborate to provide quality instruction. Vision: • We will collaborate through effective implementation of Professional Learning Communities.

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100 Mission Vision Continuous Improvement Cycle

101 Values and beliefs into action Reflective of your theory of change
VISION = DESTINATION Values and beliefs into action Reflective of your theory of change Must be informed by data and research – the evidence of best practices • The collaboration around data to inform vision IS getting the agreements in place for change

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104 The Improvement Plan as the Evidence of Engagement

105 HOW ARE WE GOING TO GET THERE?
Items essential to the success of your plan: Bringing together implications for planning from demographic, perception, process, student learning data as well as problem solving.

106 HOW ARE WE GOING TO GET THERE?
Items essential to the success of your plan: Professional development to support the plan. An effective leadership structure that defines roles and responsibilities, meeting times, etc., to carry out the plan. • Partnerships to that are aligned to realizing the vision.

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110 CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT AND EVALUATION
“Continuous improvement causes us to think about upstream process improvement; not downstream damage control.” Teams & Tools

111 CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT AND EVALUATION
Evaluate all parts of the system. Align elements to vision. Systems thinking. Next steps.

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113 CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT CONTINUUM CATEGORIES
Information and Analysis Student Achievement Quality Planning Leadership Professional Learning Partnership Development Continuous Improvement and Evaluation

114 INFORMATION AND ANALYSIS
School Continuums ~ Pages INFORMATION AND ANALYSIS Fall Spring

115 “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.”
Winston Churchill Former British Prime Minister As quoted at INSEAD Knowledge

116 MONITORING SCHOOL PROGRAMS AND PROCESSES
If you are not monitoring and measuring program implementation, the program probably does not exist.

117 You cannot evaluate a program that you cannot describe.
EVALUATING SCHOOL PROGRAMS AND PROCESSES You cannot evaluate a program that you cannot describe.

118 MONITORING PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION If you can describe what a program will look like when implemented, you can monitor its implementation, and evaluate its results.

119 Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

120 Note: Tell audience to bring yoga clothes tomorrow!

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127 LEADING THE CHANGE/IMPROVEMENT
PROCESS Identify the change agents. Empower with data to identify need(s). Collaboratively prescribe change. Support through prof learning, leadership, partnerships. Evaluate to make sure it is making the intended difference. VISION

128 CALIBRATING YOUR SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT EFFORTS ONLINE MEETINGS
WHAT: Calibrating Your School Improvement Efforts, moderated by Bradley Geise. WHO: Open to all, at no cost. WHEN: Once per month, approximately 60 minutes. HOW: Via Join.me

129 Bradley Geise


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